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Tag: xenophobia

YLE poll: Support for the PS of Finland nosedives to 8.5%

Posted on May 5, 2016 by Migrant Tales

A poll published by YLE News Wednesday shows and reinforces how support for the anti-immigration populist Perussuomalaiset (PS)* continues to nosedive. Compared with the 17.7% they got in the April 2015 parliamentary election, support has plummeted to a new low of 8.5%. 

Good news for Finland’s culturally diverse community, migrants, and minorities.

Why?

The BBC describes the party in the following terms below. We couldn’t agree more with them.

“The party advocates strict immigration controls and argues that Finns, not migrants, take priority for social and healthcare spending. Its roots lie in rural Finland and it has championed welfare policies that give it a populist dimension.”

If the PS ever got over 50% of the vote and had a majority in parliament, they would pass laws that would make migrants and minorities into third-class citizens. Their immigration policy is hostile to migrants and would encourage human rights violations.

How would this happen?

They would overturn Section 6 of the Finnish constitution that guarantees that everybody, irrespective of his or her background, is equal before the law.

The PS in a nutshell: A party that is openly hostile to visible migrants and cultural diversity.

Na?ytto?kuva 2016-5-5 kello 8.00.10

Read full story here.

Continue reading “YLE poll: Support for the PS of Finland nosedives to 8.5%”

The 1 + 1 = 2 types who post racist comments

Posted on May 1, 2016 by Migrant Tales

Who can understand the logic of people who post racist things and exercise a very basic 1+1=2 argument? Some of these are reactions to a recent blog posting on Migrant Tales, The Kolari, Finland, asylum reception center “is a living hell.”

Some of them are feverishly discussing what asylum seekers are saying about the allegedly crappy food, inadequate treatment and inadequate medical care they are getting at asylum reception centers like the one at Kolari, located in the middle of nowhere about 80km north of the Arctic Circle.

Once again, let’s point out some alleged problems at the Kolari asylum reception center:

  • The manager threatens the asylum seekers by telling them that they won’t get asylum in Finland;
  • They are charged 10 euros by the reception center to take them to visit the Finnish Immigration Service in Rovaniemi;
  • There is only one nurse that visits the center three times a week for about 150 asylum seekers;
  • The asylum seekers are forced to work 40kms from the reception center;
  • The food is bad, but as one asylum seeker said, this is not the main issue because they didn’t flee their country for the food;
  • UPDATE: The camp manager charges each asylum seeker 3 euros if they want to play football.

Certainly if a Muslim did these things to Finns a lot of people in this country would be outraged.

Na?ytto?kuva 2016-5-1 kello 16.56.21

Continue reading “The 1 + 1 = 2 types who post racist comments”

Racism, bigotry, ultranationalism, neo-Nazism are nothing more than ourselves staring back at us from a mirror

Posted on April 30, 2016 by Migrant Tales

Why aren’t we surprised and shocked by what we see today in Europe? Populism, racism, bigotry, ultranationalism, isolationism, and fascism spread thanks to the media and the tacit support of many who nod in approval and silence. Colonialism, wars, and exploitation of non-white Europeans through slavery are some of the windfall profits that gave us our present standard of living that is guarded by populism, fascism and bigotry. 

We shouldn’t bite the hand that has fed us for so many centuries, right?

Our implicit gratefulness to slavery and colonialism for our high standard of living today exposes why racism and bigotry in Europe and elsewhere remain largely unchallenged.

A story by Helsingin Sanomat  about the Estonian members of the Soldiers of Odin in Finland is a good example of how the media gives tacit support to white privilege, or doesn’t challenge it strongly enough.

While the reporting appears sound, there is one problem with the story. Helsingin Sanomat doesn’t follow up the article with an editorial.

Too often the Finnish media may write about a far-right group like the Soldiers of Odin. It may express some objection  but we don’t see often enough editorials condemning such groups and how they pose a threat to our society.

How many editorials have you read about the rise of the Perussuomalaiset (PS)* and how it threatens our Nordic welfare state?

The classic pipedream in Finland is that somehow racists and fascists can “debate” and come to an agreement about “the problem.” Certainly white people debating between themselves could do that but it’s more complex if you included migrants and minorities in the debate.

And have you ever seen a visible migrant or visible minority being interviewed by the media about the Soldiers of Odin?

Should we be surprised that reporting by the Finnish media of far-right vigilante and anti-immigration groups is so selective and one-sided?

If we went to a mirror as a society what would we see staring back at us? That would be far-right and right-wing anti-immigration populism, fascism, ultranationalism, racism and bigotry to name a few.

The fact that we live in denial about our history and the present is the fuel that feeds our selective and bigoted worldview.

Continue reading “Racism, bigotry, ultranationalism, neo-Nazism are nothing more than ourselves staring back at us from a mirror”

How fair is the Finnish media when it reports about racism and bigotry?

Posted on April 24, 2016 by Migrant Tales

What role has the media played in spreading racism and bigotry in Finland since the 1990s? If it has played a big role, has its reporting improved or got worse? 

The narrative of the media, and that of politicians concerning our ever-growing culturally diverse society, has changed but it still has a lot of room for self-criticism and improvement.

When the media serves politicians and other voices that single out certain groups, victimizing them because they are of a different religious or cultural background, it’s clear that this exercise is costly to taxpayers.

It is ironic that politicians of anti-immigration parties like the Perussuomalaiset (PS)*, and the tacit support they receive from other politicians from other parties, want Finland to fail in becoming a successful culturally diverse society.

Why would politicians like MEP Jussi Halla-Aho, MP Olli Immonen and many other in this country would not want to see us succeed in building a successful culturally diverse society?

The answer is simple: They would be out of a political job and career.

Let’s go back to the original question: Is Finland’s media racist and bigoted?

While we can’t claim that Finland’s media is racist they do publish a lot of racist and bigoted things. Many of these stories are in code and serve the anti-immigration narrative. One recent example is of a story by YLE on crime rates committed by foreigners in Eastern Finland.

The YLE story’s headline stated that crime committed by foreigners rose by 179% in the beginning of the year. We find out later in the story that we’re speaking of only 206 suspected crimes, which is only about 1.5% of all 14,923 crimes reported during that period.

A story doesn’t have to be “racist” to be inappropriate. Unfair journalism that is slanted is just sloppy and unprofessional journalism.

While not all police ethnically profile people and while not all journalists are multiculturally challenged, it’s those that have these issues that give these professions a bad name.

Take a look below at some of the ads from the 1990s published by Ilta-Sanomat, a tabloid that continues to publish racist stories about migrants, asylum seekers and minorities. Certainly the stories that Ilta-Sanomat writes today have changed from about 25 years ago. Even so, it’s still the same narrative but in a different context.

Some of these diehard narratives are that migrants are rapists, criminals, social welfare bums and just plain bad people that shouldn’t be trusted.

Check out these Ilta-Sanomat ads below for yourselves.

Na?ytto?kuva 2016-4-24 kello 15.24.10

Continue reading “How fair is the Finnish media when it reports about racism and bigotry?”

Tightening family reunification requirements is like putting a noose around human rights

Posted on April 21, 2016 by Migrant Tales

Like Europe, Finland is also suffering from a lack of leadership. When we start to fear our ineptness in solving problems, we slide into our shells with the help of populism, simplistic solutions, and wishful thinking.  

The latter can lead us to many unpleasant places like social media lynchings, witch hunts and shelve indefinitely values like human rights.

Everyone knows that the family is a fundamental human right. Article 16 of the UN Declaration of Human Rights states:

Na?ytto?kuva 2016-4-21 kello 7.30.11

Source: UN.

And here’s one of my favorite articles of the latter Declaration:

Na?ytto?kuva 2016-4-21 kello 7.31.32

Source: UN.

We have written in Migrant Tales about a worrying trend and how the Finnish government plans to tighten family reunification requirements in this country.

Continue reading “Tightening family reunification requirements is like putting a noose around human rights”

The role of the Finnish media and politicians who spread their racist statements

Posted on April 17, 2016 by Migrant Tales

The Perussuomalaiset (PS)* is a horrible party for migrants and minorities. They have the dubious “honor” of being the first modern party in Finland to capitalize on voters’ racism and bigoted views. Certainly they couldn’t have done it alone. All the major parties have the same type of politicians who state and write the same kind of things.

Some politicians are pretty straightforward about their bigotted views while others speak in code.

PS foreign minister, Timo Soini, is a politician who usually speaks in code and acts as the “good cop” of racism.

For bigotry and racism to bloom in any society, you need a complacent media, which thinks no differently from such politicians. How else are you going to get your racist and bigoted message to your followers?

The whole so-called debate in Finland on asylum seekers, migration, and migrants is a colossal lie by parties like the PS and others. Its only aim is to scapegoat and shift blame from politicians, who are inept, to migrants and minorities.

Even the president of Finland, Sauli Niinstö, doesn’t get it. He makes wishy-washy statements like the government about racism in Finland. He acts like many closet anti-immigration politicians who play down social ills like racism because he believes it won’t affect him directly.

Wrong.

Ask the Norwegians what happened on 22/7.

Racism is a cancer that spreads in our society with 1 + 1 = 2 arguments. It won’t create jobs, bring innovation, and foster peace in our society but impoverish us and force us to fear even our own shadows. Listening to racists pitch their bigoted arguments is like listening to sexist things said about women. Is it acceptable?

There are some faint positive signs that the media and the Finnish Immigration Service (FIS) are tired of being rubber stamps to such politicians.

This week, PS MP Maria Tolppanen’s blog was taken down for inciting hatred against migrants with misinformation. Even FIS put out a statement rebuffing her false claims that white Finns get less social aid than migrants.

Tolppanen is such an arrogant politician that she’s even threatened to go to the police.

PS MP Pentti Oinonen is another example of how facts are cooked. In January, he claimed that a fifteen-year-old was raped in his hometown of Kuopio by an asylum seeker.

Other masters of deception and bigotry are PS MEP Jussi Halla-aho and former MP James Hirvisaari, both who have been sentenced for ethnic agitation. In 2011 that an asylum seeker had raped a teenage minor that never took place.

But not only PS politicians make up stories about asylum seekers, migrants, and minorities; the National Coalition Party does this too.

Former MEP Eija-Riitta Korhola, who apparently doesn’t like wind power, claimed that she’s heard about “a lot of” animals like sheep and chicken that have died under mysterious circumstances around wind farms. In the tweet below she asked for an independent inquiry into the matter.

Korhola has a Ph.D. Her dissertation, which was defended successfully in 2014, was on “Climate Change as a Political Process: The Rise and Fall of the Kyoto Protocol.”

Na?ytto?kuva 2016-4-17 kello 10.08.23

National Coalition Party former MEP Eija-Riitta Korhola suspects that wind farms cause animals to die.

Continue reading “The role of the Finnish media and politicians who spread their racist statements”

An official apology for the racist and bigoted things politicians say and write today in Finland

Posted on April 15, 2016 by Migrant Tales

What do politicians like Timo Soini, Riikka Slunga-Poutsalo, James Hirvisaari, Jussi Halla-aho, Juho Eerola, Olli Immonen, Jussi Niinistö, Maria Lohela, Tom Packalén, Olli Sademies, Freddy Van Wonterghem, Pentti Oinonen, Laura Huhtasaari, Terhi Kiemunki and many, many others have in common? They write a lot of racist and bigotted stuff. They are as well all or were members of the Perussuomalaiset (PS)* party.

PS MP Tolppanen is the latest case to get her fingers burned for pitting white Finns against migrants and minorities after her blog entry was taken down. She appears surprised and has threatened to take the matter to the police.

Without getting into all the details of what she wrote, Tolppanen misinformed social aid information that white Finns and migrants were getting. Certainly the gist of her argument was that migrants get more social aid than white Finns.

Wrong.

If you want to read more about what Tolppanen wrote, visit Saku Timonen’s blog.

What Tolppanen wrote and what so many of her dubious “colleagues” wrote is nothing new. Migrants get special treatment, migrants commit rape, migrants don’t want to integrate, migrants are lazy, migrants are social bums…

The racist insults and false claims that these politicians make will not be forgotten. The children of those very people that they target with their racist and bigotted statements won’t forget.

We will not forget.

In the future, we will look back at this wretched period and so will the whole nation as well. I wouldn’t be surprised that the president of this country or the prime minister will formally apologize on behalf of these politicians. Na?ytto?kuva 2016-4-15 kello 8.13.40

 

 

Read complete story here.

Continue reading “An official apology for the racist and bigoted things politicians say and write today in Finland”

Populism and nationalism in Finland have made us fear our own shadows

Posted on April 9, 2016 by Migrant Tales

The Perussuomalaiset (PS) party, which bases its popularity on anti-immigration rhetoric, empty nationalism, and promises, appears eager and “overjoyed“ that parliament will “finally” take long-overdue steps to tighten immigration law and undermine the human rights of asylum seekers.

Some of the changes that the new law will make possible if passed are shortened asylum appeals and do away with immigration on humanitarian grounds. Last year, there were only 119 people who got a residence permit in Finland on humanitarian grounds. Even so, the grand xenophobic party believes this to be important to make our country unattractive to asylum seekers.

It doesn’t take much gray matter to understand that the PS is lashing out against asylum seekers and migrants in an attempt to fix its atrocious poll standings, which plummeted in the fall.

Continue reading “Populism and nationalism in Finland have made us fear our own shadows”

Pieksämäki reception center fire shows that the Finnish media and police service consider asylum seekers “guilty before proven innocent”

Posted on April 2, 2016 by Migrant Tales

It is surprising that the Länsi-Savo story below doesn’t mention once the term “suicide” in the story about an alleged Iraqi 45-year-old asylum seeker who locked himself in Thursday night and attempted to set his room on fire. 

Reports Länsi-Savo: “One asylum seeker at the [Pieksämäki] reception center is suspected of starting a fire in his room,” said Senior Constable Kari Toivonen of the Eastern Finnish police department.

Moreover, the story does state that the asylum seeker had locked himself in a room, and set it on fire because he felt frustrated by the slow pace of his asylum application process and missed his family.

The question we should thus ask is why would a person, who is not considering committing suicide as well as put in harm’s way other people, would lock himself in a room and try to set it on fire?

Na?ytto?kuva 2016-4-2 kello 8.36.57

These tweets by @onkkoponkko highlight how hard and unkind we have become. If Finns treated their own kind the way they treat asylum seekers today this country would be up in arms.

Instead of just accusing the man of a criminal act, the Länsi-Savo reporter should have asked if reception centers in this country offer adequate psychological help to people suffering from depression and other issues such as post-traumatic stress disorder.

But the suspect who tried to take his life is an asylum seeker. Asylum seekers have no voice in Finland and are usually guilty before proven innocent. The narrative of the Länsi-Savo story and that of the police reveals how heartless and cold we’ve become as a society to the suffering of others. Finding a human with feelings in Europe these days isn’t easy especially in Finland.

Continue reading “Pieksämäki reception center fire shows that the Finnish media and police service consider asylum seekers “guilty before proven innocent””

The foreign minister of an island called Finland

Posted on April 1, 2016 by Migrant Tales

Finnish foreign minister, Timo Soini of the Perussuomalaiset (PS)* party, was on the Embuske, Veitola ja Salminen talk show on Thursday. On the program, he showed his bigotted views with a smile by taking credit for stopping the flow of asylum seekers to Finland.

“We stopped the flow [of asylum seekers],” he boasted. “And credit should be given to the PS.”

Last year, some 32,500 asylum seekers came to Finland. 

Soon after Soini’s statement, National Coalition Party MP Arto Satonen said that credit should go to his party’s interior minister, Petteri Orpo.

Imagine, two parties fight to see who gets credit for being the most heartless.

Credit and merit?!

Is it a “merit” to turn your back to people fleeing war, poverty, and persecution? Is it a “merit” to believe that your greedy expectations and arrogance will save you or your children from suffering the same fate in the future as these asylum seekers today?

Na?ytto?kuva 2016-4-1 kello 9.18.31

Watch full talk show here.

Certainly Donald Trump’s “good cop” has the gall to affirm such a thing. According to him, we should be proud of ourselves for turning our backs to people who are fleeing war and in need of protection.

Continue reading “The foreign minister of an island called Finland”

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